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Iron Man: The Mask in the Iron Man

Iron Man: The Mask in the Iron Man

List Price: $14.95
Your Price: $14.95
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A must-buy for fans of the character
Review: (Honestly I'd give this a 3.5 out of 5-but I want to bring up that silly 1 star rating :)
This story arc was written by Joe Quesada, right before he took over as Marvel's Editor in Chief. It's a fun, well written concept. Tony Stark's current model armor gains sentience, and while it isn't really malevolent, it basically ends up wrecking his life. The art has a high tech, fairly realistic look to it that works perfectly for Iron Man. Regarding the other posters comment about Quesada "learning to write from Kevin Smith movies"-that's ironic for two reasons. First, of course, Smith is an extremely talented writer (and he has the awards to prove it). Second, Joe Quesada was the artist for Kevin Smith's run on Daredevil-a book that's also available from Amazon, and definitely worth getting.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: More credit for Quesada!
Review: I have to say I really enjoyed this collection of issues from the latest Iron Man volume(!), the only part that didn't hold water being the relationship between Tony Stark and Rumiko Fujikawa.
Strange how Joe Quesada managed to actually make us feel sympathy for a deranged suit of sentient armor as it 'falls in love' with its creator, and the desparate battle that ensues is sure to quicken the pulse of loyal readers every time. The part I most enjoyed was the confrontation with Whiplash (formerly Blacklash) despite the kinky garb he was given, the ending of which I reckon would make a fantastic cliffhanger for the end of the long-awaited Iron Man movie- what a shame Tony wakes up and the revealing of his identity was... all a dream!! Maybe in an alternate reality this could have spun the comic into a completely different direction, and I feel it's a pity that it wasn't given a chance. Perhaps they should have kept that one 'in the wood' for a quiet moment in the title, as opposed to stunting this awesome opportunity in the middle of another big story.
As with all graphic novels I love reading comics without the advertisements, and the pace of this story arc is excellent. Give yourself a treat if only for another copy of the fantastic Sean Chen cover from issue #29.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: I like it.
Review: I used to think Iron Man was a stupid idea with a stupid costume. I was at the library looking for a comic to check out when I saw this. I looked at it, curious to see what was behind the cool looking cover. I liked the artwork(bad artwork turns a good comic story to garbage) and I thought the Idea of a hero stripped of his super powers(or armor), and forced to face them was pretty cool.

I think there where a few things I found frustrating, like Tony's relationship with Ru feels like it's falling apart( I find that frustrating), and the battles could have been more exiting(more heavily speed lined, different angles, more dramatic reactions, etc.). There were 3 to 6 fights of so.

Tony's armor is, to him, a menace. He tries to teach it to be a hero, because he can't kill it. It's to powerful. The armor get's the wrong idea and kills someone. the situation is very touchy, one wrong move and your dead. Thats the exitement.

The thing I think that sort of kripples the comics spice is all the words. He's telling the story to you, then there's all the talking. He(Tony) tells the story even in fights, which intimidates readers. It could have been made better (nearly everything in life could be better) but that doesn't mean it's bad. You might be the type who likes to read lots of diologue.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Not the best. But not the worst either.
Review: Joe Quesada isn't the worst IM writer ever but he is far from the best (With Dave and Bob I doubt anyone ever can be) The Sentient Armor was a silly idea to begin with so and their wasn't much that Joe Quesada could do to pull it out of the fire. And to the reviewer that was dissing Kevin Smith...I think you don't know what comedy is....

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Great Story
Review: This is a fantastic story! I don't see why people hate it so much. It basicly goes from a plot idea of "What if Tony's Iron Man suit became sentient - that it became self aware. Also has touching ending.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: This is Terrible Writing
Review: Where did the writer learn his craft, from watching Kevin Smith movies? Because this book's plot is so weak that it can not be saved even with the artwork of Sean Chen.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Given a TPB too soon.
Review: Why this was made into a TPB, especially so soon after the original comics' publication, is beyond me. Quesada takes a good idea -- Iron Man's armor coming to life -- and does a decent job of it. (Although not as good as Mike Saenz did with the all-computer-generated-art graphic novel CRASH.) The living armor's origins are pretty apocryphal (the "Y2K bug?" Come ON!), but it gets pretty spooky when the armor gets nasty -- in particular when it "deposits" Tony Stark on a desert island so that he can ponder whether he should join w/the armor or not!

The events of this TPB are being expounded upon in Iron Man's title even now, so many of its aspects may be rendered moot.


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